Hi NXP,
Can PN7160 support EMV L1, paypass, and paywave?
thank you.
@danielchen @AlexanderB What about for the use case of using something like Felix Cloud Kernel for payment processing? Requirements there are only to have the hardware be EMV L1 certified, no need for L2/L3 certification. Would the PN7160, PN7642 or even the PN7462 (legacy product?) work in this situation? Linux based system would be the go-between the cloud and the MCU/integrated front end. Our preferred part would be the PN7642, but it isn't clear if that part has/can achieve EMVL1 certification.
Are samples available for the PN7220?
Hi @JohnEE123 ,
Unfortunately I am not familiar with the Felix Cloud Kernel and cannot comment on this.
The PN7160 can hardly pass EMV L1 (and is not recommended for new EMV designs), it heavily depends on the sorrounding material. You are far better of with a PN5190 or PN7642.
The PN7642 and PN5190 share the same analog front-end. Even though the PN76 family is not placed in the EMV marked by us, we are very confindent that it can pass EMV L1 (as the PN5190 does).
For the PN7220 currently are no samples available. I do not know the timeline when engineering samples will be made available.
Greetings, Alex
Hi @Karyliu
PN7160 is not targeted for EMVCo products. PN7160 is an NFC controller designed for integration in mobile devices and devices compliant with NFC standards. Applications includes Mobile devices, portable equipment, consumer devices...
For EMVCo products. I would suggest you use PN5190. PN5190 is a robust solution for payment terminals. Offering full compliance with EMVCo 3.1 and NFC Forum certifications.
please refer to below link for more details about PN5190.
Hi Daniel,
Thank you for your reply.
What system versions are supported by PN5190?
Currently, Android 13 and above versions are required. Can PN5190 support it?
Hi @Karyliu ,
I just want to add something to the answer of Daniel.
Yes, the PN5190 is tailored for EMVCo usecase and fits it perfectly. But it is only a NFC Front-End and needs a host controller where the application runs. This is different from a PN7160 which is a controller itself running NCI for an interface.
The better suited successor of the PN7160 would be the upcoming PN7220. Which is also targeting the EMVCo marked and supporting Android 13. Unfortunately it is not released yet and the official release date is around June.
Best regards, Alex
Hi AlexanderB,
Have pN7220 been released yet? I have information on the NXP official website.
Can PN7220 pass PCI certification?
Does PN7160 support PCI authentication?
Thank you.
Hi Alexander,
I got it.
Thank you.